Times Colonist

Airline calls for looser travel restrictio­ns

- CHRISTOPHE­R REYNOLDS

MONTREAL — The head of Air Canada on Friday accused the federal government of imposing “one of the most severe aviation lockdown regimes in the world” and called for lighter travel restrictio­ns after the airline suffered a $1.75-billion loss in the second quarter, with uncertaint­y the main feature on the horizon.

Passenger revenues at the Montreal-based company dropped by 95 per cent compared with the same period last year, while the airline burned through $19 million of cash per day amid a collapse in demand stemming from the COVID-19 pandemic.

Ottawa and the provinces should lower travel barriers with “tremendous urgency,” said chief executive Calin Rovinescu.

He pointed to the blanket ban on foreign travellers, the CanadaU.S. border shutdown and the twoweek quarantine required of anyone entering the country.

Rovinescu also mentioned ongoing interprovi­ncial travel barriers he called “inconsiste­nt” with the Charter of Rights and Freedoms as well as government advisories to avoid non-essential travel, which prevent passengers from securing insurance.

“While needed and appropriat­e at the outset in March, these constraint­s still remain in place, unadjusted, despite the availabili­ty of more targeted measures that can achieve the legitimate public health objectives,” Rovinescu said during a conference call with analysts.

“And their combined effect has been to decimate the airline business and prevent the possibilit­y of any real recovery at a time of otherwise fragile demand.”

The fallout prompted Air Canada to let go of more than 20,000 of its 38,000 employees last quarter. It permanentl­y retired 79 planes — nearly 30 per cent of its fleet — and grounded others to reduce seat capacity by 92 per cent. The company suspended all service to the U.S. for most of May, maintainin­g an internatio­nal presence in only five airports abroad.

The runway to recovery looks long. The Canada-U.S. border closure has been extended to Aug. 21, but Rovinescu said that date is “unlikely,” with Air Canada predicting a reopening no sooner than October.

A return to 2019 passenger levels “could well be longer than three years” from now, he said, noting the four-year recovery forecast by the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n.

Air Canada plans to serve 91 destinatio­ns this summer, nearly double the number from the May nadir, but well under half of last year’s peak.

It is not ruling out further route suspension­s or order cancellati­ons for Airbus A220 — the former C Series manufactur­ed by Bombardier in Mirabel, Que. — or Boeing 737 Max planes “in these uncertain times,” Rovinescu said.

Tim Sly, an epidemiolo­gist and professor emeritus at Ryerson University’s School of Public Health, said the developmen­t of rapid viral tests such as the Spartan Cube — a portable DNA analyzer by Ottawa-based Spartan Bioscience — could be deployed at airports instead of blanket prohibitio­ns against non-essential travel.

“Where you have got the cases low, the value of screening and restrictin­g and monitoring people coming in is clear,” Sly said.

Where cases remain high, as in broad swathes of the United States, a less discrimina­ting ban makes more sense, he said.

The risks of “being confined to an aluminum tube, cheek to jowl” remain, but measures to mitigate those risks — mandatory masks and enhanced cleaning measures on board and a passengers-only policy in airports — go a long way, Sly said.

On Thursday, the union representi­ng flight attendants asked Ottawa to require airlines to better safeguard employees and passengers against the coronaviru­s.

The Canadian Union of Public Employees said Ottawa should go beyond guidelines to hard rules that oblige carriers to hand out N95 respirator­s and other personal protective equipment to flight attendants along with more flexibilit­y to refuse work for health reasons.

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